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Unit 3 Part II The Amendments to the US Constitution

Unit 3 Part II The Amendments to the US Constitution

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How does the Amendment process create “constitutional flexibility”? Offers a method of changing the Constitution to apply to new ways of thinking

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Page 2: Unit 3 Part II The Amendments to the US Constitution

What does “Constitutional Flexibility” mean?

• The ability to change in order to adapt to a changing world

Page 3: Unit 3 Part II The Amendments to the US Constitution

How does the Amendment process create “constitutional flexibility”?

• Offers a method of changing the Constitution to apply to new ways of thinking

Page 4: Unit 3 Part II The Amendments to the US Constitution

The First 10 Amendments

• The Bill of Rights

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Amendment 1

• Religion• Assembly• Petition• Press• Speech

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2nd Amendment

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Amendment 2

• Right to Bear Arms

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Amendment 3

• 75cent Amendment

• No Quartering of Troops

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4th Amendment

• Need a warrant 4 search and seizure

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5th Amendment

• Rights of the Accused

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Due Process

• Everyone is entitled to the same treatment under the law

Page 15: Unit 3 Part II The Amendments to the US Constitution

Self-Incrimination

• Cannot be madeto testify against yourself

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Grand Jury

• A grand jury must determine if there is enough evidence to indict (to charge)

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Eminent Domain• Government can take your property for the publics best interest butmust pay a fair price forit.

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Double Jeopardy

• You cannot be charged with the same crime twice

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6th Amendment

• Right to a speedy, fair trial• Right to a lawyer.• Right to a jury trial• Right to confront witnesses against you• Right to bring your own witnesses

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7th Amendment

• 7 suits for lawyers suing• If sued for more than $20 can ask to have

a jury trial.

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8th Amendment

• No cruel and unusual punishment• No excessive bail

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9th Amendment

• Right reserved to the people

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10th Amendment

• Rights reserved to the states

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When were the Bill of Rights ratified?

•1791

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What are civil liberties?• The freedom to think and act without

government interference or fear of unfair treatment.

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“Government shall make no law respecting an establishment of

religion”

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What does the “free exercise clause” allow for in the United States?

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John Peter Zenger1733

• Landmark case in Establishing the right to a free press

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What does a free press expose the American people to?

• A wide variety of ideas and viewpoints

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What does censorship refer to?

• Banning films or printed materials because of offensive or alarming ideas.

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In what ways can the government regulate the mass media?

• Media cannot be used to harm someone’s reputation

• Media can be limited for national security purposes

• Laws prohibit printing of obscene materials

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What amendment allows people to join groups?

• 1st Amendments right to assemble

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Limits on personal freedoms

• Libel – cannot print lies about someone• Slander – speaking lies about someone• Rights of the Community – rights of one

can sometimes be limited if conflict with the rights of the community

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Suffrage

• The right to vote

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Suffrage Amendments

• Highlight the amendments that increase the right to suffrage.

• 15th, 17th, 19th, 23rd, 24th, 26th

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Civil Rights Movement

The fight for equal treatment under the law for Americans

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Decades of the Civil Rights

• 1950’s and 1960’s

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Discrimination

• Unfair treatment based on prejudice against a certain group

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“Jim Crowe” Laws

• Laws requiring African Americans and Whites to be separated in most public places

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Segregation

• The separation of the races

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Plessy v Ferguson (1896)

• Determined segregation was constitutional• Established the principle of “separate but

equal”

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Brown v Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas (1954)• Overturned Plessy v Ferguson• Segregation in public schools inherently

unequal

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Civil Rights Act of 1964

• Banned discrimination based on race, gender, religion, and national origin in public facilities, employment, education, and voter registration.

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Voting Rights Act of 1965

• All citizens have opportunity to vote, regardless of race

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Affirmative Action Programs

• Programs that encouraged the hiring and admitting of minorities and women to programs traditionally closed to them.

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Racial Profiling

• Being singled out as suspects because of the way they look.